By Paul L. Williams Ph.D., (author of THE DAY
OF ISLAM)
With the able assistance of Douglas Hagmann, Bill Krayer and Michael
Travis
Friday, May 11, 2007
http://www.canadafreepress.com/2007/paul-williams051107.htm
Situated within
a dense forest at the foothills of the Catskill Mountains on the
outskirts of Hancock, New York, Islamberg is not an ideal place for
a summer vacation unless, of course, you are an exponent of the
Jihad or a fan of Osama bin Laden.
The 70 acre complex is surrounded with "No trespassing" signs; the
rocky terrain is infested with rattlesnakes; and the woods are home
to black bears, coyotes, wolves, and a few bobcats.
The entrance to the community is at the bottom of a very steep hill
that is difficult to navigate even on a bright sunny day in May. The
road, dubbed Muslim Lane, is unpaved and marred by deep crevices
that have been created by torrential downpours. On a wintry day,
few, save those with all terrain vehicles, could venture forth from
the remote encampment.
A sentry post has been established at the base of the hill.
The sentry, at the time of this visit, is an African American
dressed in Islamic garb - - a skull cap, a prayer shawl, and a loose
fitting shalwat kameez. He instructs us to turn around and
leave. "Our community is not open to visitors," he says.
Behind the sentry and across a small stream stand dozens of
inhabitants of the compound - - the men wearing skull caps and loose
fitting tunics, the women in full burqa. They appear ready to deal
with any unauthorized intruders.
The hillside is blighted by rusty trailers that appear to be without
power or running water and a number of outhouses. The scent of raw
sewage is in the air.
The place is even off limits to the local undertaker who says that
he has delivered bodies to the complex but has never been granted
entrance. "They come and take the bodies from my hearse. They won't
allow me to get past the sentry post. They say that they want to
prepare the bodies for burial. But I never get the bodies back. I
don't know what's going on there but I don't think it's legal."
On the other side of the hill where few dare to go is a tiny village
replete with a make-shift learning center (dubbed the "International
Quranic Open University"); a trailer converted into a Laundromat; a
small, green community center; a small and rather squalid grocery
store; a newly constructed majid; over forty clapboard homes;
and scores of additional trailers.
It is home to hundreds - - all in Islamic attire, and all
African-Americans. Most drive late model SUVs with license plates
from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, South Carolina, and
Tennessee. The locals say that some work as tollbooth operators for
the New York State Thruway, while others are employed at a credit
card processing center that maintains confidential financial
records.
While buzzing with activity during the week, the place becomes a
virtual hive on weekends. The guest includes arrivals from the inner
cities of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania and, occasionally,
white-robed dignitaries in Ray-Bans from the Middle East.
Venturing into the complex last summer, Douglas Hagmann, an intrepid
investigator and director of the Northeast Intelligence Service,
came upon a military training area at the eastern perimeter of the
property. The area was equipped with ropes hanging from tall trees,
wooden fences for scaling, a make-shift obstacle course, and a
firing range. Hagmann said that the range appeared to have been in
regular use.
Islamberg is not as benign as a Buddhist monastery or a Carmelite
convent. Nearly every weekend, neighbors hear sounds of gunfire.
Some, including a combat veteran of the Vietnam War, have heard the
bang of small explosives. None of the neighbors wished to be
identified for fear of "retaliation." "We don't even dare to slow
down when we drive by," one resident said. "They own the mountain
and they know it and there is nothing we can do about it but move,
and we can't even do that. Who wants to buy a property near that?"
Islamberg's Grocery Store
The complex serves to scare the bejeesus out of the local residents.
"If you go there, you better wear body armor," a customer at the
Circle E Diner in Hancock said. "They have armed guards and if they
shoot you, nobody will find your body."
At Cousins, a watering hole in nearby Deposit, a barfly, who didn't
wish to be identified, said: "The place is dangerous. You can hear
gunfire up there. I can't understand why the FBI won't shut it
down."
Islamberg is a branch of Muslims of the Americas Inc., a tax-exempt
organization formed in 1980 by Pakistani cleric Sheikh Mubarak Ali
Gilani, who refers to himself as "the sixth Sultan Ul Faqr," Gilani,
has been directly linked by court documents to Jamaat ul-Fuqra or
"community of the impoverished," an organization that seeks to
"purify" Islam through violence.
Though primarily
based in Lahore, Pakistan, Jamaat ul-Fuqra has operational
headquarters in New York and openly recruits through various social
service organizations in the U.S., including the prison system.
Members live in hamaats or compounds, such as Islamberg,
where they agree to abide by the laws of Jamaat ul-Fuqra, which are
considered to be above local, state and federal authority.
Additional hamaats have been established in Hyattsville,
Maryland; Red House, Virginia; Falls Church, Virginia; Macon,
Georgia; York, South Carolina; Dover, Tennessee; Buena Vista,
Colorado; Talihina, Oklahoma; Tulane Country, California; Commerce,
California; and Onalaska, Washington. Others are being built,
including an expansive facility in Sherman, Pennsylvania.
Before becoming a citizen of Islamberg or any of the other Fuqra
compounds, the recruits - - primarily inner city black men who
became converts in prison - - are compelled to sign an oath that
reads: "I shall always hear and obey, and whenever given the
command, I shall readily fight for Allah's sake."
In the past, thousands of members of the U.S. branches of Jamaat
ul-Fuqra traveled to Pakistan for paramilitary training, but
encampments, such as Islamberg, are now capable of providing
book-camp training so raw recruits are no longer required to travel
abroad amidst the increased scrutiny of post 9/11.
Over the years, numerous members of Jamaat ul-Fuqra have been
convicted in US courts of such crimes as conspiracy to commit
murder, firebombing, gun smuggling, and workers' compensation fraud.
Others remain leading suspects in criminal cases throughout the
country, including ten unsolved assassinations and seventeen
fire-bombings between 1979 and 1990.
The criminal charges against the group and the criminal convictions
are not things of the past. In 2001, a resident of a California
compound was charged with first-degree murder in the shooting of a
sheriff's deputy; another was charged with gun-smuggling' and
twenty-four members of the Red House community were convicted of
firearms violations.
By 2004 federal investigators uncovered evidence that linked both
the DC "sniper killer" John Allen Muhammed and "Shoe Bomber" Richard
Reid to the group and reports surfaced that Wall Street Journal
reporter Daniel Pearl was captured and beheaded in the process of
attempting to obtain an interview with Sheikh Gilani in Pakistan.
Even though Jamaat ul-Fuqra has been involved in terror attacks and
sundry criminal activities, recruited thousands of members from
federal and state penal systems, and appears to be operating
paramilitary facilities for militant Muslims, it remains to be
placed on the official US Terror Watch List. On the contrary, it
continues to operate, flourish, and expand as a legitimate
nonprofit, tax-deductible charity.